Unlike other cooking mini-games for the Wii, the Food Network and Red Fly Studio teamed up to make that will actually teach people how to make real life, usable recipes. With 30 actual recipes to choose from, the player is put into the kitchen and shown how it would be to make these meals by using a combination of Wiimote motions for slicing, dicing and mashing.
GameZone writes: "As far as cooking games go, the Nintendo Wii has seen a number of genuinely fun titles. However, many of them are designed as weekend family diversions, with cartoonish visuals in trite "beat-the-clock" scenarios that only look like cooking. Food Network: Cook or Be Cooked is a powerful brand license has the potential to raise the bar on cooking games, weaving authentic techniques with realistic Wii-mote mechanics. The question is, just how well does it stand up to the heat?"
DEN writes: "I am not sure how many people are looking for Food Network to come into their homes to lecture them about their cooking habits. I do know that no one needs another half baked Wii game that plays for the so-called "casual" gamer. There is nothing worse for the videogame industry than most of these shovelware games. I assume people are still buying them, but ultimately the only way to stop these bad games from becoming the lackluster standard is to avoid these games altogether."
Military writes: "It's a dangerous thing, playing a cooking game alongside your wife. Strong play on your part guarantees increased expectations on your real-life kitchen aptitude.
My wife suggested as much after I scorched her in a cooking duel of eggs and bacon, as played out on the Wii."